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Volume 46, Issue 1, Pages 31-38 (July 2003)


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Environmental tobacco smoke and ischemic heart disease

Malcolm R Lawa, Nicholas J Walda

Abstract 

Cohort and case control studies show a 30% excess risk of ischemic heart disease in nonsmokers whose spouses smoke compared with that in nonsmokers whose spouses do not smoke. There is a nonlinear dose-response; the excess risk from actively smoking 20 cigarettes/day is only 80%. Large cohort studies of active smoking support the nonliner dose-response (the excess risk in smokers of 5 cigarettes/day is about 50%). Animal studies show a pronounced vascular effect of environmental tobacco smoke. In experimental studies passive and active smoking have similar effects on platelet aggregation. The collective evidence supports a significant effect of low dose tobacco smoke exposure in causing ischaemic heart disease.

a Department of Environmental and Preventive Medicine, Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine, Barts and The London, Queen Mary’s School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of London, London, UK

PII: S0033-0620(03)00078-1

doi:10.1016/S0033-0620(03)00078-1


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